Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Indian men have the least sex: survey

A
survey conducted by Men's Health found that males in India have sex an
average of once a week, while Croatian men were the mostly likely to get
dirty in parks, pools and cars.

The survey ranked British men and women as the kinkiest.

When it comes to the sexcapades of men around the world, Croatians have
the most partners in their lifetimes, Indians think their women are
faking it, and British men and women are most likely to take a page from
"50 Shades of Grey," according to a new survey.
Men's Health found that Indian men have sex less than once a week on
average. This was the lowest rate among the 30 participating countries.
Almost half of the Indian males surveyed (48%) said they believe their
partners often fake orgasm, and the average man has had just three
bedroom companions.

British men and women were deemed the kinkiest based on the survey. British ladies had an average of nine partners each.

RELATED: ONE IN FIVE WOMEN SAY THEY NEVER FEEL SEXY: SURVEY
And men around the world might want to learn a thing or two from their
Dutch brothers. The Netherlands was the only country where women said
they were happy with the amount of foreplay that was offered.
Nearly 50,800 people around the world participated in the survey.

RELATED: PAKISTAN A HOMOPHOBIC COUNTRY THAT GOOGLES GAY PORN: REPORT
Men's Health India's managing editor Bobby Varkey told The Telegraph
that Indians may live in noisy "joint homes," which prevents them from
having sex as often as they'd like because of the lack of privacy. He
said that having an extramarital affair is incredibly taboo in India.
Varkey also drew a link between apparent sexual frustration among men
and the nation's epidemic of rape and violence against women.
Ranjana Kumari of the Center for Social Research, however, challenged
this notion. She pointed out that 95% of people in India are in arranged
marriages, and half wed by the time they turn 18.
"Sexual access is very much there for men," she told The Telegraph. "I
wouldn't want to generalise that India is a frustrated [sexual] culture.
Rape isn't about sex but about men who think they can control women and
instill fear in them."